United States, Department of the Interior, Report of the Secretary of the Interior, v. 2 (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1887) 448-75.

United States, Department of the Interior, Annual Reports of the Department of the Interior for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1900: Indian Affairs (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1900) 558-600.

United States, Department of the Interior, Annual Reports of the Department of the Interior for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1904: Indian Affairs, Part I (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1905) 544-65, 616-31.

Tables 1-6 do not include the following units because of a lack of data for them: Five Civilized Tribes, Malheur, Uinta Valley, St. Regis, Oil Springs, Kansas Chippewa and Munsee and Vermillion Lake, Red Lake, Mille Lac, and Isabella Chippewa.

TABLE 7: Indian people farming or raising stock in 1915 on reservations substantially allotted between 1900 and 1910, as a proportion of the population and a proportion of the number of able-bodied men

Reservation

Farmers and
Livestock
Raisers

Population

Percent of
Population

Able Men

Percent of
Able Men

Cheyenne River

500

2,708

18.5

585

85.5

Coeur d'Alene

93

834

11.2

212

43.9

Colville

570

2,468

23.1

573

99.5

Crow

279

1,699

16.4

400

69.7

Fort Berthold

180

1,154

15.6

254

70.9

Kiowa

1,003

4,410

22.7

1,024

97.9

Klamath

100

1,145

8.7

284

35.2

Leech Lake

365

1,754

97.9

373

20.8

Lower Brule

90

481

18.7

118

76.3

Rosebud

700

5,519

12.7

1,139

61.5

Shoshone

278

1,705

16.3

401

69.3

Spokane

87

611

14.2

140

62.1

Standing Rock

733

3,434

21.4

750

97.7

Uintah and Ouray

199

1,161

17.4

299

66.6

White Earth

300

6,217

4.8

927

32.4

Totals:

5,477

35,300

15.5

7,480

73.2

Source: United States, Interior Department, Reports of the Department of the Interior for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1915 (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1915), 82-89, 125-29)